By Administrator | May 14, 2010
Goodbye BlackBerry: Future Belongs to iPhone
Thanks for bringing mobility to the masses, but the future belongs to the iPhone. There are many reasons for this but perhaps the most compelling is, at the heart of Canadian company Research in Motion’s (RIM) (RIM) culture lies an antiquated mobile technology: paging.
So no matter how many Bolds, Curves, Pearls and Storms that RIM drums up—why so many?—the iPhone-like smartphone is simply not in RIM’s DNA. Let’s face it, RIM’s phones are needlessly complex for end users, and RIM’s app store looks like a Quik Mart compared to Apple’s nearly 200,000-apps App Store.
Another nail in BlackBerry’s coffin comes courtesy of consumers. While IT departments love the BlackBerry for its security measures and manageability, the power is shifting in favor of consumers. Macs and iPhones are clearly riding this trend deeper into the enterprise. Heck, the iPhone arguably ignited this consumer-driven tech trend.
Just look at the early adopters of the iPhone in the enterprise. Executives gave up their CrackBerry addiction for sleek, easy-to-use iPhones running consumer apps such as iPod, Facebook, travel apps, foreign-language voice-to-voice translation apps, and, especially relevant to executives, golf apps like Golfshot GPS. iPhones have been trickling down org charts ever since.
But don’t take my word for it, check the numbers. It’s the tale of two companies. RIM’s stock price today is around $70-a-share, nearly the same as it was a year ago. In the same time period, Apple stock has steadily soared from $120 last year to $260 today. The Silicon Valley company continues to be a Wall Street darling. In the world of technology and innovation, if you’re not flying, you’re falling.
Much of Apple’s success is due to the storied three-year-old iPhone. In the most recent quarter, Apple sold 8.75 million iPhones, a 131 percent increase over the same quarter last year. The big quarter also topped the record-setting fourth quarter last year. Tim Cook, Apple’s chief operating officer, has called the iPhone growth rate “staggering.” A new iPhone and iPhone OS 4.0 are expected to hit the streets this summer.
BlackBerry: A Cultural Conundrum
The first BlackBerry, released in 1999, was really just a glorified pager. BlackBerry’s greatest user innovations were a hardware keyboard and a trackball. Little has changed despite new RIM offerings to rival the iPhone. RIM continues to tout secure text and e-mail messaging as the killer feature.
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I traded in my Blackberry for an iPhone last week. They cost the same to run and I can do a lot more with the iPhone so I love it.
The only negative? iPhone’s battery doesn’t last very long. My Blackberry could go a day or two without having to recharge. The iPhone lasts a max 4 hours if I’m using it.